Title: Ground Water
1GROUND WATER HYDROLOGY
- by
- AVIJIT DAS
- 14PCE066
- M. Tech, 2nd Semester,
- WATER RESOURCE ENGG.
2Content
- Definition
- Sub Surface Water
- Classification of Aeration Zone
- Classification of Saturated Zone
- Aquifer
- Aquiclude
- Aquifuge
- Aquitard
- Darcys Law
- Dupuits Assumptions
3GROUND WATER
4SUB SURFACE WATER
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6- THE AERATION ZONE HAS 3 SUB-ZONES
7SOIL WATER ZONE
- Soil water is held in the pore spaces between
particles of soil. - Soil water is the water that is immediately
available to plants. - This water can be removed by air drying or by
plant absorption, but cannot be removed by
gravity.
8Various types of soil with Field capacity and
wilting point
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10CAPILLARY ZONE
- The capillary fringe is the subsurface layer in
which groundwater seeps up from a water table by
capillary action to fill pores. - Pores at the base of the capillary fringe are
filled with water due to tension saturation.
11SATURATED ZONE IS CLASSIFIED INTO 4 CATEGORIES
12AQUIFER
- An aquifer is a layer of porous substrate that
contains and transmits groundwater. - An aquifer is an underground layer of
water-bearing permeable rock or unconsolidated
materials (gravel, sand, or silt) from which
groundwater can be extracted using a water well. - Aquifers may occur at various depths.
13TYPES OF AQUIFER
14UNCONFINED AQUIFER
- Unconfined aquifers are sometimes also called
water table or phreatic aquifers, because their
upper boundary is the water table - When water can flow directly between the surface
and the saturated zone of an aquifer, the aquifer
is unconfined. - The deeper parts of unconfined aquifers are
usually more saturated since gravity causes water
to flow downward.
15CONFINED AQUIFER
- A water-bearing subsurface stratum that is
bounded above and below by formations of
impermeable, or relatively impermeable soil or
rock. - Also know as an artesian aquifer.
16PROPERTIES OF THE AQUIFER
17POROSITY
- Porosity or void fraction is a measure of the
void spaces in a material, and is a fraction of
the volume of voids over the total volume,
between 01, or as a percentage between 0100. - Porosity of surface soil typically decreases as
particle size increases.
18SPECIFIC YIELD
- The quantity of water which a unit volume of
aquifer, after being saturated, will yield by
gravity it is expressed either as a ratio or as
a percentage of the volume of the aquifer
specific yield is a measure of the water
available to wells.
19FIELD CAPACITY
- Field capacity is the amount of soil moisture or
water content held in soil after excess water has
drained away - The physical definition of field capacity is the
bulk water content retained in soil
20SPECIFIC RETENTION
The ration of the volume of water that a given
body of rock or soil will hold against the pull
of gravity to the volume of the body itself. It
is usually expressed as a percentage.
21PERMEABILITY
22TRANSMISSIBILITY
- A measure of the ratio of the response amplitude
of the system in steady-state forced vibration to
the excitation amplitude the ratio may be in
forces, displacements, velocities, or
accelerations. - The transmissibility of an unconfined aquifer
depends upon the depth of the GWT.
23AQUICLUDE
- It is a solid, impermeable area underlying or
overlying an aquifer. If the impermeable area
overlies the aquifer pressure could cause it to
become a confined aquifer. - It can absorb water but cannot transmit it in
significant amount.
24AQUIFUGE
An impermeable body of rock which contains no
interconnected openings or interstices and
therefore neither absorbs nor transmits water.
AQUITARD
A bed of low permeability adjacent to an aquifer
may serve as a storage unit for groundwater,
although it does not yield water readily
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26DARCYS LAW
Darcy's law is a simple proportional relationship
between the instantaneous discharge rate through
a porous medium, the viscosity of the fluid and
the pressure drop over a given
distance. Darcy's law is only valid for slow,
viscous flow Q T w i i hydraulic
gradient w width of the aquifer T co.eff of
transmissibility of the aquifer
27DUPUITS ASSUMPTIONS
- stabilized drawdown- i.e., the pumping has been
continued for a - sufficiently long time at a constant
rate, so that the equilibrium - stage of steady flow conditions have been
reached. - The aquifer is homogeneous, isotropic, of
infinite areal extent and - of constant thickness i.e., constant
permeability. - complete penetration of the well (with complete
screening of the - aquifer thickness) with 100 well efficiency.
- Flow lines are radial and horizontal and the flow
is laminar i.e. Darcys - law is applicable.
- The well is infinitely small with negligible
storage and all the pumped water comes from the
aquifer.
28CONCLUSION
29WATER WATER EVERYWHARE TRY TO SAVE IT IF YOU
CARE
30THANK YOU